CMU Veterans Head Automotive AI Startup

Pittsburgh-Based Argo AI Developing Self-Driving Tech for Ford

The Ford Motor Company has invested $1 billion in Pittsburgh-based Argo AI. All four of the start-up's senior leaders have strong ties to Carnegie Mellon. Pictured here are Peter Rander, Argo AI COO; Mark Fields, Ford president and CEO; Bryan Salesky, Argo AI CEO; and Raj Nair, Ford executive vice president for product development and chief technical officer.

Carnegie Mellon University alumni and former staff members at the National Robotics Engineering Center (NREC) have founded Argo AI, an artificial intelligence startup in which Ford Motor Company is investing $1 billion over the next five years.

The startup, based in Pittsburgh with sites in Michigan and the San Francisco Bay Area, will develop a self-driving system for an autonomous vehicle that Ford plans to produce in 2021. In the future, Argo AI might also license the software platform to other companies and in other sectors.

All four of Argo AI's senior leaders have strong ties to Carnegie Mellon. CEO Bryan Salesky is a former project leader at NREC who most recently worked with Google's self-driving car program. He was also software lead for CMU's Tartan Racing Team, which won the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's $2 million Urban Challenge race for self-driving cars in 2007.

"We founded Argo AI to tackle one of the most challenging applications in computer science, robotics and artificial intelligence — self-driving vehicles," Salesky said in a blog posted on behalf of the Argo AI team. "Autonomous vehicles have the potential to save thousands of lives, to extend personal mobility to many who might not have it and to transform the landscape of an urban setting."

Ford President and CEO Mark Fields said the Argo AI team will develop the software platform for a "level four" autonomous car the company plans to introduce in 2021. A level four self-driving system can control a car — without need for any driver attention — in all but a few environments, such as severe weather.

"It's no coincidence that major corporations, such as Ford, come to Pittsburgh to develop self-driving technology," said Andrew Moore, dean of the School of Computer Science. "They need the best-trained, most talented people for this task, and Pittsburgh is the place to find them. We're excited for Argo AI, which was founded by people who cut their teeth on self-driving cars at Carnegie Mellon's School of Computer Science and College of Engineering. And we're excited about the improved safety and efficiency that this new technology will provide for us all."

By the end of the year, Argo AI expects to have more than 200 team members at its three sites.

"This is an exciting announcement, and further illustrates that Carnegie Mellon and the city of Pittsburgh are at the center of autonomous vehicle research and development, " said James H. Garrett Jr., dean of the College of Engineering. "Carnegie Mellon's School of Computer Science and College of Engineering have conducted more than 30 years of research and development in autonomous vehicles that is the foundation for much of the commercial activity we are seeing today. We are extremely proud of the co-founders of Argo AI, who all have ties to Carnegie Mellon and our Electrical and Computer Engineering Department and National Robotics Engineering Center."